This matter is before the Court upon the "Stipulated Protective Order" tendered by the parties. [DE 35]. While the Court finds that the tendered order is largely acceptable, it is partially overbroad in that it fails to include mechanics necessary to account for all interests - including the public interest - implicated by such relief. Accordingly, the Court rejects the tendered document without prejudice and invites the parties to tender a revised agreed order consistent with the guidance provided in this Order.

As guidance in drafting a revised order, counsel should be sensitive to the following principles:

1. The Court generally will accept an agreed umbrella order, supported by stated good cause, that reasonably restricts use, circulation, and disclosure of designated materials exchanged in and in the context of discovery. The tendered order is acceptable in that regard.

2. Such an umbrella order cannot legitimately preauthorize the sealing of substantive court filings. Unlike discovery materials, items actually filed in the Court's record and considered substantively by the Court may be cloaked from public view only upon an individualized showing of good cause by the party seeking to seal the particular item (and a particularized finding by the Court). Thus, ¶ 4 of the tendered order is objectionable. The parties should construct a mechanism by which a filing party gives notice, as applicable, of its proposed use of any "confidential" information, to permit any other party to seek court guidance or intervention regarding whether a substantive filing should (and can) be sealed in whole or part.[1]

3. In addition to containing a mechanism for a party to challenge an opponent's designation of material as "confidential, " the order further must acknowledge that a non-party may seek permission to intervene to challenge the terms of or operation of the order, or that a producing third-party also may challenge the order.[2]

4. The parties must revise the tendered order to cure the noted deficits.

Accordingly, the parties' construed motion for entry of their stipulated protective order [DE 35] is DENIED WITHOUT PREJUDICE.

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